Friday, May 31, 2013

A Night at Le Cirque des Rêves

I briefly mentioned my graduation party in last week's post, revealing that it was themed according to Erin Morgenstern's The Night Circus (or Le Cirque des Rêves, "the circus of dreams"). I had originally wanted it to be a backyard bash, but the weather didn't cooperate with me (ain't that life?). So, I changed plans the night before (when I read that the weather forecast was solid rain for the next 36 hours), and luckily, I was able to use almost everything I had made/bought for the party, despite having it inside my brother's house as opposed to his backyard.

Since I haven't been feeling too crafty recently (job-searching and grad school burnout will do that to ya), I'm going to take the next few posts to talk about my crafting for "A Night at Le Cirque des Rêves." It was definitely a party on a budget, and I spent roughly two months gathering supplies and making decorations. Those of you who stress-craft will understand how therapeutic that was in the midst of writing a thesis. ;) I'm planning to use this post as a landing page of sorts for my various party craft posts, which I will ultimately link back to this page as I write them. But I'd also like to use it as an introductory post for the party itself.

Confession: This party turned me into a Pinterest user. Like many, I have a love-hate relationship with Pinterest. I am an outspoken skeptic and decrier of imminent Pinterest fails (aka pictures of results that will never, ever be able to be reproduced following the directions given), and there's just something about vicariously crafting through curating others' work that rubs me the wrong way. Craft snobbery? Maybe. At any rate, I did discover the usefulness of Pinterest as an inspiration board, and I created a secret board where I began outlining ideas for my party (I've since turned it into a public board, now that the party's over). It was a great place to store all of my ideas (I pinned a YouTube video, various craft ideas, and even products/food items that I thought might work).

Photo by Luis Beltran


 
Once I had a theme down, and an inspiration board going, I set about creating a Facebook event. Here's the event description:
Ladies and gentlemen, step right this way... to a backyard gathering to celebrate my triumph over graduate school and my 26th birthday! The event name is from a novel called 'The Night Circus,' but don't worry if you haven't read the book. Just read the information below, and you'll be all set - you can also watch this short video to get a feel for the ambiance: http://bit.ly/Z3VfFR.

-- "The towering tents are striped in white and black, no golds and crimsons to be seen. No color at all, save for the neighboring trees and the grass of the surrounding fields. Black-and-white stripes on grey sky..."

In case you missed it, this is a themed party, and there is a dress code. Like the description above, clothes worn to "A Night at Le Cirque des Rêves" should be black and/or white. Bits of red accents are allowed (see: http://bit.ly/Y8zfGC).

-- This is also an after-dinner party, so while there will definitely be goodies, you might want to eat dinner beforehand. Also, if you want to bring food/drink, that would be awesome. However, it has to be either black or white (again, bits of red are allowed, and we can cheat a bit with chocolate!).

-- This will be a night of revelry, by which I mean hanging out, catching up, and later watching a vintage circus movie in [my brother's] sweet basement: "The Greatest Show on Earth" (1952, see http://imdb.to/gJxtwk).

Come one, come all, just RSVP. ;)
Some elements I wanted in my circus-themed party were games, vintage photos/fliers, a photo booth, and themed snacks (it was an after-dinner party, so the food was lighter). Below are a few groupings of pins for each party aspect, and I'll add the link to each post as I write it (so stay tuned!):

Game elements (circus games post):
















Ideas for vintage photos/fliers, mostly from Library of Congress' site (vintage photos post):



Pins for the photo booth (photo booth post):




Food ideas (party snacks post):





Details and fun touches inspiration pics (decorations and details post):





Friday, May 24, 2013

Bead Bottle Keepsake Keychain

 ... or BBKK, for short. ;) I follow a blog called Dollar Store Crafts, which collects all sorts of cool craft ideas from readers that use items you can purchase from dollar stores and dollar spots (at stores like Target). A popular item a few months back were these little bottles that originally contain glitter for nail art:

Photo from Simply Thrifty Nails

I'm not a huge glitter fan, so I tend to skim right over these sorts of items, but luckily for me, other crafters saw potential in the little bottles that contained the glitter:

From Mad in Crafts
Submitted by Carissa on Dollar Store Crafts













Yes, one craft kept the glitter in the bottle, but I'm pretty sure I would have adored a pixie dust necklace when I was younger. At present, I'm not exactly keen on having a mini-bottle necklace (it gives me Angelina Jolie-Billy Bob Thornton flashbacks), but when my mom shared some mini bottles with me, I fell victim to their charm and started brainstorming how else I could use them.

This past weekend I threw a combination birthday/graduation party, which I called "A Night at Le Cirque des Rêves." As you can probably tell, it was a themed party, patterned after Erin Morgenstern's novel, The Night Circus. Once I sort through the scads of pictures, there will be a flurry of posts about all the crafting projects that I did prior to the party (it was a party on a budget, so most things were handmade or bargain purchases). For now, I'll offer up my Pinterest inspiration board as a teaser.

My awesome friend Kathryn helped me generate ideas, make crafts (particularly dozens of paper medallions one afternoon!), and kept our enthusiasm high during the pre-party academic crunch. I wanted to make her some sort of themed thank you gift, and after giving it some thought, I discovered the perfect use for those mini bottles I'd been holding onto: a bead bottle keepsake keychain! :) The only supplies I needed were a mini bottle, some seed beads, a keychain clip, and super glue. Oh, and sorry again for the dark photos - I'm definitely a night-crafter.


Step One: Empty bottles of glittery mess. Dollar Tree had miniature plastic zipper bags of various sizes a little while ago, and I went crazy buying them (they are PERFECT for crafting!). So, I just used a few mini-bags and transferred the contents of each bottle into its own little baggie (because crafting is almost synonymous with hoarding).


Step Two: Add keychain clip. I already had a few of these carabiner-type keychain clips floating around (hoarding pays off!), and they attach to the top of these mini bottles easy peasy.

Step Three: Fill with seed beads/glitter/etc. Okay, so I did use some of the glitter. The larger star-like pieces (in the picture above) weren't so bad, and I liked how they sparkled amongst the seed beads, adding to the feel of a captured ambiance (for those unfamiliar with The Night Circus, it's a book about a *magical* circus). The party's colors were, like the Night Circus itself, black and white (with the occasional red accent!).


This seed bead collection was a bargain buy from Ross!

















Step Four: Seal bottle. I don't know about you, but my keychains have to be made of pretty stern stuff, else they crack apart the first time they hit the pavement (c'mon, everybody drops their keys). In order to ensure the lid stayed closed tight, I rimmed it with some Gorilla Glue and let it dry overnight.

I gave my friend her keychain right before the party as a thank you, so now she has a little bottle of captured ambiance to remember the night by! I would love to re-use this idea for other events, but I don't know if it would be a great favor across the board (not sure if guys would really like this on their keychains... maybe it would work better as a stand-alone trinket in those cases - especially if the lid was replaced with a cork). It was a really simple, yet still special and unique keepsake from a fun night - win-win!

Friday, May 17, 2013

Wedding Cross Stitch: Teeny Tiny Taj Mahal


I attended a wedding reception this past weekend for my friends who eloped earlier this year, and yes, I cross stitched a little something for the happy couple! Since I had just finished all of my grad work for the semester (and degree!) last Friday, that didn't leave me much time. It was sometime after midnight on Friday that I remembered that I didn't have any sort of gift for the following day.

Luckily, I already had this little frame on hand, which I picked up from Michaels not too long ago. It was so cute that I knew I could use it in some way - and it was perfect for this craft! As a rule, I don't really like putting pieces of cross stitch behind glass - it can be a tight fit, it negates their three-dimensional aspect, etc. So, when I pulled away the backing of my mini frame, I was pleased to discover that its 'glass' was really just a cheap plastic film, adhered to the backside of the frame itself.  A few slices with my Exacto knife, and I had what I wanted:

A few slices of the blade...



Such craftmanship... ha!











... and Ta-Da! A pane-less frame, painlessly achieved. ;)

At this point, it was probably something like 2am, so I left my prepped frame empty for the night. The next morning, I started brainstorming for pattern ideas. I wanted something meaningful for the couple, but not just their initials or something since it was already such a little piece. I began trolling their Facebook pages (shameless, I know) for ideas - mainly colors, at first (they are in the process of merging households). However, I stumbled on a cache of photos of their travels to India this past fall. If memory serves correctly, my friend joined his then-girlfriend as she was on a service trip to the country... though the details escape me. At any rate, during their time there they visited the Taj Mahal together and took a few adorable couple photos, which served as the basis for my inspiration.

Once I knew I wanted to cross stitch them a teeny tiny Taj Mahal, I set about finding a pattern (I'm not the best pattern-generator, even with graph paper [been there, tried that]). After casting about fruitlessly online, I remembered my QR code cross stitching experience and typed: "pixelated taj mahal" into Google (or something like it). While wading through those results, I finally hit paydirt:


I don't know what those beads are, or what this item is, really - I cropped the image down a bit (the original has INDIA spelled out underneath, and I didn't really think that was necessary). I would link you to the source page, but when I attempted to visit it via Google Image, my browser freaked out, saying it wasn't safe. So, I just captured a screenshot from the safer Google Image vantage point. After doing some math (translating the pattern onto Aida cloth in terms of size), I knew I had a solid winner. After rooting around my thread collection, I settled on a combination of burnished orange and gold for contrast.

The gold thread is a little bit of a pain to work with, to be honest - it has a more wiry constitution, if that makes sense. It was worth the mini hassle, though, because the mini Taj Mahal came out so well! What do YOU think?

Click to Enlarge









Yeah, I sneaked my initials in the bottom-right corner. The right image is for copying purposes, if anyone finds themselves in need of a solid miniature Taj Mahal cross stitch pattern. :P

I used double-stick tape to attach my cloth to the frame backing to hold it in place, which worked really well. In case you're curious, the project only took 3-4 hours total (I indulged in the ABC Family Harry Potter marathon while stitching). Here's my finished result:

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Testudo Treats

As many people know, the official mascot for the University of Maryland is the terrapin (or a terp, for short... er, yeah). As fewer people know, I'm about ready to graduate from UMD with my Masters degree (HOORAY), which also explains the delay on this post. To share the happiness and indulge in sentimentality, I wanted to make some little goodbye/good luck/congrats-fellow-graduate gifts for those I'm leaving behind, and I came up with these little treats:


Here's the backstory: Back in February my mom gave me a little Valentine's Day gift that mixed together some of my favorite things - owls and candy! She was also proud of her bow-making abilities (check out that awesome and complicated-looking bow in the upper left-hand corner!). I liked the whole concept of the treat bag so much that I didn't even eat the M&Ms until last month, wanting to keep the design intact. I knew that I wanted to replicate it somehow for my end-of-the-semester gifts to grad school friends, so I began thinking about how I wanted them to look and what sort of candy to fill them with. Reese's Pieces were the obvious choice, as they incorporate most of UMD's colors (ok, not red, but look at the UMD logo and Testudo image, and you'll see what I mean). For the top of the treat bags, I selected my favorite crafting medium - book pages!

I've always been a fan of the stamping-on-book-pages look (evidence), like the Etsy pieces below from RococcoCo and collageOrama:


















Happy Fourth!
I looked far and wide for a suitable turtle stamp for my treat bags... but no such luck. However, last Fourth of July, my mom and I created some decorations like this little twirler (right) by running a vintage book page through our home printer - pretty sweet, huh? So, when I hit a dead end in the stamp search, I came up with the next best thing - printing off color turtle images on pre-printed cardstock. Why not use actual book pages? Well, for one, I definitely wanted cardstock for the treat bag toppers (for sturdiness), and most books aren't printed on cardstock. Also, it was much easier to print off a set of four toppers on a sheet of cardstock (and then cut them apart) than trimming down four pages (I made 45 treat bags total, during the semester crunch, so easier = better).

I'll break down the steps for assembling below, starting with a picture of my "stamp" contenders:


I ultimately settled on the more detailed image (on right), and while I liked the red version a lot, it was a bit more maroon than I wanted (UMD's color is a solid red), so I opted for green in the end.

Step One: Making Toppers. After figuring out the dimensions of my treat bags from Wiltons, I set up a page on Microsoft Word with screenshots of Alice in Wonderland (taken from the free eBook on Google Books - I downloaded the PDF). After printing off several copies of these pages on white cardstock, I prepped my second Word document, on which I arranged my turtle 'stamps.' I simply used a clip-art from Google Image search, and recolored it via Word's picture tools menu - super low tech, here. Once my second sheet was prepped, I ran the same sheets of cardstock through the printer, layering the turtle images over the Alice text. So, they came out like this:

After they were trimmed down to size
 

Step Two: Filling Treat Bags. A little goes a long way with these, which was good for my budget. I just dropped in a little scoop of Reese's Pieces (after I peeled open the bag - curse you, static cling!).


Step Three: Attaching Toppers. I prepped my toppers by folding them all in half so that they were ready for this step. Simply sandwich the top of the bag between the two flaps of the topper (make sure there's enough to catch with your stapler), press the flaps together, and staple 'em shut!






And there you have it! It took me roughly three bags of Reese's Pieces to fill up 45 treat bags, in case you were wondering (I had a hard time guestimating, and ended up having to make a quick return to Target!). I used the back of the toppers to write little notes to recipients with a red Sharpie, which showed up pretty well. I am definitely planning on reusing this idea when I'm back in the classroom - it's really easy to reproduce in bulk, especially if you don't have such an elaborate topper-making process. And they are pretty cost-efficient, so win-win. Plus, people really enjoyed getting them:



Testudo Treats!

Friday, May 3, 2013

Repurposing IKEA Leftovers

This is an old project, and it's more resourceful than creative. Let's blame it on post-defense, pre-graduation weariness, shall we? To be fair, though, it IS about one of my proudest moments of handiness. You see, when my roomie and I were moving into our current apartment, we opted to fill in our furniture gaps with IKEA pieces (it helped that there's an IKEA less than 3 miles away). One such piece was a TV stand, a less-than-awesome picture of which is below:

This was taken pretty soon after we moved in, hence the empty picture frames and general sparsity. 

Well, as all IKEA shopper-builders know, when you buy something from IKEA that's a bit more complicated than, say, a mirror or rug, you have to buy it in separate parts - for the TV stand, that meant the stand/cabinet (I'm pretty sure it came with doors... but possibly not) and the plinth. Long story short, the roomie and I got a little turned around in the plinth aisle and grabbed the wrong size (because seriously, they all look the same in cardboard boxes). We realized this after we built the ENTIRE stand... so we went with it. Hence the little jut-out ledge at the bottom.

At the end of our IKEA build, we had a leftover piece of wood, which is usually not a good sign. We had attached the stand to the plinth and nixed what was originally the bottom of the stand, as it was unneeded. I still haven't figured out if the leftover plank was due to the fact that we had the wrong plinth or because adding a plinth is optional in the first place (you can do wheels instead). When I saw that extra piece of wood (which matched our living room) languishing away in my roomie's bedroom (it was really her TV stand, so it was her extra piece of wood), I came up with an idea.

Step One: Pester roomie to give me the piece of wood (super easy, because she didn't care).

Shelf Bracket
Step Two: Research brackets. Yes, brackets - we are building a shelf! My piece of wood was 33.25" by 14.25" and roughly 3/4" thick. After looking around and talking it over with my dad (handyman extraordinaire), I realized that I didn't really need anything fancy or expensive - I simply went to Lowe's and picked up a few of these babies. Since I was pretty sure I wasn't going to be using the shelf for anything heavier than mail, the 100lb capacity was plenty, and I liked their industrial look.

Step Three: Research wall anchors. I actually did this at the same time as my bracket research, since I knew that our apartment had hollow plastery walls that would need anchors. I honestly don't remember what kind I bought - I spoke with a worker at Lowe's after I picked out my brackets, and he helped me select the kind I needed, along with a few short screws to attach the brackets to my shelf.

Click to Enlarge
Step Four: Planning/sketching. I had to figure out where I wanted the shelf (centered) and how high. I then researched how to go about assembling my shelf (Do I attach the brackets to the wall or shelf first? Which end of the bracket attaches to the shelf - long or short?). There are all sorts of how-to's online - step-by-step articles (here's one on putting in wall anchors) and videos abound. Since I did this all around a year and a half ago, I'm a bit fuzzy on the details, but I simply followed the directions I found online that matched my situation (L-brackets, wooden shelf, hollow wall). The tools I used were a drill (I have a cute little Black & Decker one I picked up in Target awhile back), a rubber mallet, and a level, combined with the anchors, screws, and brackets I purchased.

Click to Enlarge
Once I had all my materials and had read/watched my how-to's, the project itself didn't take long at all - by the end of the afternoon, we had a new shelf for the landing strip area of our apartment. I still love it, it works really well to transition the living room into the dining room (which have different styles), and we use it all the time for mail and notes to each other. And guess how much this project cost, total? If you clicked on the wall brackets link (and saw how cheap they are!), you might have an idea already. It cost $6.52. Yup, six dollars and fifty-two cents (thanks, MD sales tax). Full disclosure, the vase and flowers I picked up at Michaels, I bought the clock from Big Lots, and the artwork is actually a framed postcard of a Sargent painting from the National Gallery of Art downtown. But, you get the picture - and now, scroll down for a few more of 'em!

Can you spot the owl pillow from a previous project? :)